Port 2710 has no official owner. IANA never assigned it a service. But in the peer-to-peer world, it became quietly familiar — the default port for XBT Tracker, one of the most widely deployed open-source BitTorrent trackers ever built.
What Range This Port Belongs To
Port 2710 sits in the registered port range: 1024–49151. These ports are intended for user applications, registered with IANA to prevent collisions. The well-known ports below 1024 are reserved for system services — HTTP at 80, HTTPS at 443, SSH at 22. Above 49151 are the ephemeral ports, grabbed temporarily for outbound connections and then released.
Registered ports are supposed to be claimed. Most are. Port 2710 was not. IANA's registry shows it unassigned, which means anyone can use it for anything — and occasionally, someone does.1
The XBT Tracker Connection
XBT Tracker (XBTT) is a BitTorrent tracker written in C++ by Olaf van der Spek. It was built for one purpose: handle as many peer announcements as possible with as few resources as possible. It succeeded. Administrators running busy torrent sites deployed it because it was fast, lightweight, and open source.2
XBT's default configuration listens on port 2710. The announce URL it told clients to use:
And for UDP — which is faster and stateless, requiring less overhead than HTTP:
XBT also exposed a scrape endpoint at /scrape and debug stats at /debug on the same port. One port, several functions, all built around the tracker's job: maintain a list of who has what, and tell peers where to find each other.
Because XBT was widely deployed and rarely reconfigured, port 2710 became recognizable. Not officially — IANA never touched it — but practically, in the way that matters: if you saw traffic on port 2710, you had a reasonable guess about what it was.3
Why Unassigned Ports Matter
The registered range has 48,128 ports. Not all of them are spoken for. Unassigned ports aren't empty ports — they're unclaimed territory. Any software can use them, which means they accumulate informal uses over time.
Some unassigned ports stay truly empty. Others become associated with specific software through convention: a developer picks a number, documents it, ships it as the default, and suddenly thousands of deployments share that number. Port 2710 is the latter.
This matters for two reasons. First, it means traffic on port 2710 isn't meaningless — it has a probable interpretation, even without a registry entry. Second, it means firewall rules and network policies need to account for informal conventions, not just official assignments.
How to Check What's Listening on This Port
On Linux or macOS:
On Windows:
If you see something listening on port 2710 and you didn't configure it, check what process owns it. A BitTorrent tracker running intentionally looks the same as one running without your knowledge.
Security Considerations
Port 2710 has no known major vulnerabilities specific to it. XBT Tracker itself is old software — the project is largely unmaintained — and running outdated tracker software on a public-facing server carries the usual risks of unpatched code. If you're running an XBT instance, verify it's still receiving security updates or consider alternatives.
Because 2710 is unregistered, it won't appear in most port scanners' named-service databases. That obscurity is not security. Anyone scanning your server will find the port open; they just won't get a label for it automatically.
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